franchisekiller
Set the controls for the heart of the Sun
franchisekiller

Steve Zissou: Anne-Marie, do all the interns get Glocks?

@islamos: FYI he's not speaking Arabic. Secondly? Lighten up.

@Branden Kerr: Classy. Because Haiti has totally recovered. Ass hat.

@aanzola: Holy shit. That is massive. Can't wait for the revert!

@adamshaftoe: Agreed. I found it terrible after ten seconds.

That was effin' brilliant!!

John Candy? *sob*

Chris Foss is still colouring my dreams.

@TheAncient: Please stop responding to articles about people doing cool stuff and do some cool stuff yourself instead, thank you.

I think it's incredibly sad that America has deteriorated to a degree where you cannot leave an infant alone for two minutes without fearing it will be kidnapped or killed. Where I grew up - in Denmark - it was perfectly normal for us kids to wait in a running car when dad ran to the store or whatever. It's also

America is descending into a downward spiral of ignorance, crime, fear and diabetes. I'm waiting patiently for Greater Canexico!

"This video is no longer available due to a copyright claim by Bunraku Productions LLC."

Ooh snap! You talkin' heresy! :)

The tired old argument about size. China is the same size as the US (or larger depending on definition), and investing heavily in high speed rail. Why? Because it is a good idea. The reason the US won't adopt rail transportation has much less to do with the size of the nation, and much more to do with the American

"It is not convenient because of the inherent problem with rail in this country.

@Dezerus Richardson: I guess you are attempting to be funny (maybe you are even channeling another meme altogether) - but just in case you are not: It's Milan not Mulan (Milano in Italian.)

So because it is fiction it doesn't have to be believable or plausible? That's a weird definition of fiction. I'll keep watching the Science channel, don't worry - but I would still like my SF movies to be more realistic and based on plausible ideas/plots. But if you like Bayism better then that's your prerogative.

Moon was definitely a good try at a realistic/believable SF movie. There was some gravity issues but otherwise it was excellent - and of course Sam Rockwell is always a treat.

I completely agree - and isn't it incredibly depressing how few scientifically accurate SF movies there are? I'm having a hard time naming more than a handful!